As I said earlier, it's a religious debate, you can't win. You'd have as much luck walking into a church and trying to use facts and data to convince people there that your god is better than theirs, it won't work, their belief is not based on facts to begin with so it cannot be swayed with facts, no matter how compelling they are.
I was sold on the EV idea when the most conservative, anti-government, "everything is a conspiracy" right wing guy I know bought an EV because he ran the numbers and realized it would cover the vast majority of his driving, save time (no more gas stations) and ultimately save a considerable amount of money. We have people here acting as though EVs are some kind of speculation that some people think could maybe work some day while here in reality we have people who have actually been living with them for years and mysteriously not having all these problems that are sure to doom EVs in that alternate universe where they have not already caught on. Now that same guy, having had one for several years now his wife wants to replace her car with one too. He's going to keep his Subaru STi because it's fun but all the regular commuting will be handled by the EVs.
Now IMO there are still some compelling advantages to ICE cars, I think they're a lot more fun to drive, I love the sound of an engine, I like shifting gears, I like tinkering with engines and I'm extremely fond of my own (nearly 30 year old) ICE powered car and will keep driving it until something happens to it but I recognize that I'm the exception to the norm. If I were forced to buy a <10 year old car I would absolutely get an EV, no question there, the ability to just plug it in when I get home and never having to stop and fill up again is a compelling enough advantage to me, not having to do oil changes would be icing on the cake. It would meet at least 95% of my driving needs and for anything else I can drive my partner's extremely boring but functional Prius if I need range, I can borrow a truck from one of several friends if I need to haul something, I can rent a car if I need something special, these are all trivial options that cover the edge cases.
So we're back to the fact that it's a religious debate, people who *believe* EVs won't work are going to remain oblivious to the fact that they already do work and have been working for some time now. They will invent reasons an EV won't work for them and project those problems onto everyone else, pretending that the whole world has the same limitations they themselves have or pretend to have. Everything is an insurmountable problem to them, despite the fact that somehow other people have managed to come up with solutions.